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Virtual Event | How U.S.-China Competition Upended the International Economic Order and What the United States Can Do to Fix It

Jun 26, 2024
1:00pm to 2:00pm ET


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Security concerns have become the defining feature of the U.S.-China economic relationship. The United States urgently needs a clear strategy for advancing its hard power, resiliency, and commercial interests within the bilateral economic relationship, while redefining and leading a new global economic order.

On June 26 CNAS hosted an event to discuss a new report, Disorderly Conduct: How U.S.-China Competition Upended the International Economic Order and What the United States Can Do to Fix It. Report authors shared key findings and recommendations on how to delineate a new economic strategic framework toward China that serves both the security and commercial interests of the United States.


Featured Speakers:

Peter Harrell
Nonresident Scholar, American Statecraft Program,
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Emily Kilcrease
Senior Fellow and Director,
Energy, Economics & Security Program, CNAS

Adam Tong
Associate Fellow
​​​​​​​Energy, Economics & Security Program, CNAS

Moderated by:

Geoffrey Gertz
Senior Fellow
Energy, Economics & Security Program, CNAS

For registration questions, contact Rowan Scarpino at rscarpino@cnas.org. For media inquiries, contact Alexa Whaley at awhaley@cnas.org.